You join the , a resistance group fighting to escape back to the messy, painful, real world. Standing in your way are the Musicians —powerful enforcers who believe that reality is too cruel and that Mobius is actual paradise.
The Caligula Effect: Overdose is messy, repetitive, and occasionally brilliant. It’s the JRPG equivalent of a great indie film with a low budget but a sharp script. You don’t play it for the graphics or the dungeon design. You play it for the "what if I stayed in a fantasy forever?" anxiety, the risk-taking dual story routes, and the sheer joy of perfectly timing a 6-hit Imaginary Chain while a pop song blasts in the background. The Caligula Effect- Overdose
If you scroll through the JRPG section of the Nintendo eShop or Steam, you’ll see a lot of “anime kids with colorful hair saving the world.” But every so often, a game hides in the shadows with a fascinating premise, gets a remake, and still flies under the radar. You join the , a resistance group fighting
is that game.